After studying visual arts and spending around ten years working as a stage designer in theatres and for exhibitions, Philippe Quesne (1970) set up Vivarium Studio in 2003, bringing together actors, visual artists and musicians. He designs and stages shows that seek to develop a contemporary dramaturgy based on stage devices that are like workshops, a variety of “vivarium spaces” for studying human microcosms. The shows in their repertoire (La Démangeaison des ailes, 2004; Des Expériences, 2004; D’après Nature, 2006; L’Effet de Serge, 2007; La Mélancolie desDragons, 2008; Big Bang, 2010 and Swamp Club, 2012) have been international co-productions and performed in several countries. In 2011 he created Pièce pour la technique du Schauspiel de Hanovre for the German theatre’s permanent technical team. In 2012, he was invited by the Pavillon at the Palais de Tokyo to create a stage form in collaboration with the ten artists and curators in residence. The same year, he contributed to HAU Berlin’s collective production based on the novel Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, with a specific creation at the Berlin Institute of Microbiology and Hygiene. In addition to this work, Philippe Quesne also devises performances and interventions in public spaces and natural sites, and exhibits installations during exhibitions. He has also published four short books: Actions en milieu naturel (2005), Petites réflexionssur la présence de la nature en milieu urbain (2006), Thinking about theend of the world in costume by the sea (2009) and Bivouac (2011). He is regularly invited to devise the artistic programming for events, notably the TJCC Festival at the Théâtre de Gennevilliers from 2012 to 2014. In 2013, he created Anamorphosis with four Japanese actors at the Komaba Agora Theatre in Tokyo, then Swamp Club, marking the company’s tenth anniversary. In 2014, he created Next Day, a piece for children aged between eight and eleven, at the Theater der Welt Festival in Mannheim, Germany with the production company CAMPO. Philippe Quesne has been co-director of the Théâtre Nanterre-Amandiers since January 2014, creating in collaboration with Bruno Latour and the team from SPEAP the Théâtre des Négociations. In January 2016, he premiered CasparWestern Friedrich at the Kammerspiele in Munich and in May will be premiering Welcome to Caveland! at the Kunstenfestivaldesarts.